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Additional Search Results 1 - 3 of 3 for Flamingos
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1. "One-Minute Monologue" Builds Communication Skills
...ration? If you suspect that to be the case, you might limit that likelihood by choosing the student's topic from those that were called out.) Daylight Saving my tongue bees Time the wastebasket paper clips hamburger rolls a lobster quilts a clock millionaires retirement chess tattoos blood pressure flamingos ice cream cheating a helicopter oatmeal rocking chairs the car wash nightmares a sandbox the newspaper an onion stained glass washing dishes a porcupine a dime ladybugs thunderstorms comic strips tennis a mousetrap a hairbrush an answering machine Assessment This simple rubric can be used to rate th...
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2. Group Headdresses
...ch student makes his or her own variations. The headdresses should not be identical. As in the real Junkanoo, the costumes within a group are built around a common theme. They can share a similar design element, such as the same colors or lines. They may share a theme, such as Bahamian animal life (flamingos, fish, lizards, parrots, and butterflies) or plant life (coconuts, palm-trees, and coral). Demonstrate how the resources available at each station can be used to produce quality work. + When the two-dimensional work is done, have students bring their front panel to the teacher who will check for qua...
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3. Marine Birds
...that they use to capture fish. Pelicans dive and scoop fish up in their pouched bills and drain the water before swallowing their catch. Cormorants pursue fish under water, seizing their prey with their hooked bills. Anhingas spear their fish. Frigate birds steal food from other fish-eating birds. Flamingos have beak lamellae that filter small organisms out of the water. They can eat small invertebrates and even blue green algae. Long billed, long legged birds wade in shallow water or along the edge of the water using their bills to probe in the mud or sand to pluck prey items out. Black skimmers skim...
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